[Opinions] Jacoby?
Hey Guys,
I heard this name on T.V somewhere (i think it was some college basketball player or something) but I really like it. Jacoby is a form of Jacob that means Supplanter and is pronounced like Jak-Oh-Bee. I think it's kind of a cool twist on the rediculously popular Jacob and you could use the nick names Jack, Jake, or Coby if you wanted to. I love the name Jack but have been looking for a more formal name and I'm not appealed by Jackson because it has a very southern feel with Andrew Jackson. So I think Jacoby might be a better option. Opinions?
I heard this name on T.V somewhere (i think it was some college basketball player or something) but I really like it. Jacoby is a form of Jacob that means Supplanter and is pronounced like Jak-Oh-Bee. I think it's kind of a cool twist on the rediculously popular Jacob and you could use the nick names Jack, Jake, or Coby if you wanted to. I love the name Jack but have been looking for a more formal name and I'm not appealed by Jackson because it has a very southern feel with Andrew Jackson. So I think Jacoby might be a better option. Opinions?
Replies
I prefer just Jacob, but I actually think Jacoby is quite nice. I've also heard it pronounced 'ja-COH-bee', but I think 'JAK-oh-bee' sounds better.
I had a baby name book in eighth or ninth grade that had Jacobi (pronounced ja-COH-be) as a feminine form of Jacob. I really liked it for about a year. Therefore Jacoby looks like an alternative spelling of Jacobi to me, and I think of it as more of a girl's name. But I think it would work on a boy too, and for all that book knows maybe it really is a boy's name. I personally haven't liked the name for years, but I think it's interesting and would like to see it on someone.
This message was edited 12/31/2007, 11:28 AM
Jacobi is a surname. Jacoby sounds like that. I'd stick to the tried and true Jacob, although you could try the Hebrew verson Yaakov(pronounced yah-uh-kov).
Looks like a weird nn for Jacob. Sticking a y to a name doesn't really make a new na,e.
It seems contrived to me, like someone thought they would just stick a y at the end of Jacob for some arbitrary reason.